One of the most common questions I hear from Korean-Australians planning a permanent return is simple:
“Once I move back to Korea, can I just withdraw my super?”
The short answer, in most cases, is no.
Australian superannuation isn’t “money you take when you leave Australia” — it’s “money you use when you retire.” Returning to Korea permanently does not, by itself, give you the right to withdraw it.
This article lays out what happens to your super when you leave Australia, when you can actually access it, and what you need to think about once you’re back in Korea.
The short version
- Returning to Korea permanently does not automatically release your super.
- Citizens and permanent residents generally cannot withdraw it early.
- You must reach a certain age and meet a condition of release.
- Withdrawing after you’ve become a Korean tax resident can raise Korean tax questions.
- In practice, when you withdraw becomes the most important decision.
Super is not money you carry to Korea
Many people think of super like a bank deposit. But the Australian government treats it as retirement savings, so it stays locked until certain conditions are met. Leaving Australia does not remove that restriction.
In other words, if you are an Australian citizen or permanent resident, you generally cannot withdraw your super just because you’ve moved back to Korea. It stays inside your Australian super fund.
The exception: temporary visa holders are different
People who worked in Australia on a temporary visa can withdraw their super after departing, through the DASP (Departing Australia Superannuation Payment) scheme. Permanent residents and citizens cannot use it.
This is where many Korean migrants get confused. “I’m leaving Australia, so I’ll cash out my super” — that applies to working-holiday makers, students, and temporary work-visa holders, not to PRs and citizens.
So when can you withdraw super?
In Australia this is called a condition of release. The main ones are:
1. Reaching preservation age and retiring
For most Korean-Australians today, preservation age is 60, though it can fall between 55 and 60 depending on your year of birth.
2. Leaving a job after age 60
If an employment arrangement ends after you turn 60, access can become available. This depends on your individual situation.
3. Reaching age 65
At 65 you can access your super regardless of whether you’ve retired.
Where is your super once you’re back in Korea?
The answer is simple: it stays in Australia. It remains in your super fund — AustralianSuper, Hostplus, ART, REST, and so on. You can manage the account online from Korea, and your investment options continue.
That said, if you live overseas for a long time, you should review your contact details, tax-residency information, registered overseas address, and fees.
The question that matters most — how will Korea see it?
This is the most important area in reverse migration. If you withdraw your super after becoming a Korean tax resident, how that amount is characterised as income in Korea can become an issue.
In particular, the outcome can differ depending on whether it’s a lump sum or a pension-style payment, the investment-growth portion, and foreign-exchange gains. The Korea–Australia tax treaty and Korean domestic law also need to be considered together.
Because interpretation can still vary with your individual situation, you should have a Korean tax professional review your case before you actually withdraw.
What really matters is when you withdraw
Most people ask, “Can I withdraw my super?” But the real question is — “When is the most advantageous time to withdraw it?”
For example: after you become an Australian non-resident, after you become a Korean tax resident, when the exchange rate is favourable, right after retirement, or just before returning to Korea — each timing can produce a different tax and currency result.
In closing
Leaving Australia doesn’t mean your super follows you. It stays in Australia, and you later decide when, how, and under which tax environment to take it.
In reverse migration, the key question isn’t “how much do you have” — it’s “when do you take it?” And the answer depends on your age, tax residency, the exchange rate, and your return date.